Your comments here and some comments Eliezer had made elsewhere seem to imply he believes he has at least in large party “solved” consciousness. Is this fair? And if so is there anywhere he has written up this theory/analysis in depth—because surely if correct this would be hugely important
I’m kind of assuming that whatever Eliezer’s model is, the bulk of the interestingness isn’t contained here and still needs to be cashed out, because the things you/he list (needing to examine consciousness through the lens of the cognitive algorithms causing our discussions of it, the centrality of self-modely reflexive things to consciousness etc.) are already pretty well explored and understood in mainstream philosophy, e.g Dennett.
Or is the idea here that Eliezer believes some of these existing treatments (maybe modulo some minor tweaks and gaps) are sufficient for him to feel like he has answered the question to his own satisfaction.
Basically struggling to understand which of the 3 below is wrong, because all three being jointly true seem crazy
Eliezer has a working theory of consciousness
This theory differs in important ways from existing attempts
Eliezer has judged that it is not worthwhile writing this up
Your comments here and some comments Eliezer had made elsewhere seem to imply he believes he has at least in large party “solved” consciousness. Is this fair? And if so is there anywhere he has written up this theory/analysis in depth—because surely if correct this would be hugely important
I’m kind of assuming that whatever Eliezer’s model is, the bulk of the interestingness isn’t contained here and still needs to be cashed out, because the things you/he list (needing to examine consciousness through the lens of the cognitive algorithms causing our discussions of it, the centrality of self-modely reflexive things to consciousness etc.) are already pretty well explored and understood in mainstream philosophy, e.g Dennett.
Or is the idea here that Eliezer believes some of these existing treatments (maybe modulo some minor tweaks and gaps) are sufficient for him to feel like he has answered the question to his own satisfaction.
Basically struggling to understand which of the 3 below is wrong, because all three being jointly true seem crazy
Eliezer has a working theory of consciousness
This theory differs in important ways from existing attempts
Eliezer has judged that it is not worthwhile writing this up